Monthly Archives: February 2016

8: Through a New Lens

More often than not, our society tends to label drug users as an ominous crease in the folds of the world, classifying them as a lower level of the human. Drug use tends to be seen by outsiders as simply a means to an end. People walk by those on the streets and generally just see an empty shell of what might have been a person. It’s when drugs are used by a famous actor/actress or singer/rocker that drugs become either a way of showing their resilience and “coolness”, back when drug use was still part of rock-and-roll, or the butt end of a joke. However, there’s always more to a person than what meats the eyes.

In our ASTU class, we recently watched a documentary on the world of drugs in Downtown Eastside Vancouver, focusing on the interactions between the police officers and a few, notably white, drug addicts that lived on the streets. “Through A Blue Lens”, produced by the National Film Board of Canada, shows the extreme levels of struggle and heartache that is found in many communities of poverty stricken areas (IMDb).

After watching the film, the class briefly discussed how the media tends to portray the lives before and after the deaths of drug addicted celebrities, mainly focusing on the lives of Amy Winehouse, Cory Monteith, Philp Seymour Hoffman, and Heath Ledger. I was too young to remember much about the death of Heath Ledger, and I wasn’t a big enough fan of Cory Monteith to know many details about what happened, but I was very aware when the reported deaths of Hoffman and Winehouse were announced. There was a lot of drama more about what would happen with Hoffman’s upcoming film, the 3rd installment of The Hunger Games films, rather than news about his death. Amy Winehouse had a considerable amount of broadcasting, with the paparazzi covering every drunken stupor, every drug induced action along the way prior to her untimely death. Another death that was morbidly covered, was that of Whitney Houston. Soon after her death, news vans were reported surrounding the hotel she had been in in hopes of being the first to broadcast her horrific death. The deaths of celebrities become a sort of prize for media outlets, all of them fighting for, like always, the best story. News broadcasters go from one celebrity to the next, pushing away their moral boundaries in hopes of gaining the next bonus that comes their way.

People have a tendency to judge those they know nothing about, putting assumptions (and we all know what those do…) onto their victims in a way that discredits them from being normal humans just trying to get through life. As those who don’t know the extent of the troubles the addicts may be going through, it is unfair to both ourselves and to them to try and make rash generalizations about people we know almost nothing about. As someone looking in from the outside, I can only imagine what it must be like for those people, and continue to live my life with compassion for those who are struggling.

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7: Though the Info-graph

Yesterday in our ASTU class, I had the pleasure of watching the fantastic presentations done by my fellow classmates of their archival studies we have been working on for the past few weeks. There was a wide range of work done, from a family tree of the MacLennan family, to an interactive website and a book about the artist Jack Shadbolt, to the Tumblr page documenting Japanese internment camps in Canada during WWII, focusing specifically after Pearl Harbor. The collaboration of hard work and so many different ideas to make these contributions to knowledge was both fascinating and the end to a fair amount of stress.

My group, consisting of Anna, Emily, Mishal, and myself, focused on the Chinese oppression in Canada throughout the 20th century. We took documents and photographs from the Chung Collection, and made an infographic focusing on the lack of representation of the marginalized in a contextualized manner. While working with these archives, and making the infographic timeline of the continual marginalization and racist remarks, make me think of the article we read by Jiwani and Young, Missing and Murdered Women: Reproducing Marginality in News Discourse, about the continued ignorance by the general public, mainly in Vancouver BC, of the mistreatment Aboriginal women in the Downtown Eastside. Both my group’s project and the article by Jiwani and Young have interconnected ideas of the lack or misrepresentation of the marginalized. The article focused mainly on how missing and murdered women from the Downtown Eastside, mainly those of Aboriginal background, don’t get enough attention by the police forces and the media outlets. They are mistreated and pushed aside as the other when it comes to political and economic, as well as social matters. Both the Chinese immigrants and the Aboriginal women had similar features of degrading tones. The Aboriginal woman were noted as the “bad” (Jiwani and Young, 900) women, due to their sex trade and rough ways of living, which as then categorized as the way of Aboriginal people everywhere. The Chinese were considered less in every way, being called the “canker of Canada” (RBC), and blamed for taking all of the jobs that were supposedly meant for the Canadians.

Racism plays a huge part in both of these topics I’ve mentioned, which is what led me to connect the sociology lecture about racism from today to both the infographic work my group did, and the Jiwani and Young article from class last week. While talking about four elements of racism, racialization seemed to be the most fitting to how the infographic and the article frame their findings. Racialization is the “social process where groups of people are judged and viewed as inferior or superior based on their intellect, morality, and culture” (Dilley). I think that this sums up quite well the gist of some of the points both pieces were trying to get across, implying that the differences in peoples and cultures shouldn’t reflect how each one of them is treated and recognized in society, even though, sadly, it does.

 

Works cited:

Jiwani, Yasmin and Young, Mary Lynn. “Missing and Murdered Women: Reproducing Marginality in News Discourse.” Canadian Journal of Communication 31.4 (2006): 895-917. Web. 10. Feb. 2016

UBC Rare Books and Special Collections, Chung Collection, FC106_C5_O74_1912; https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/chung/chungpub/items/1.0056195#p12z-6r0f:race

 

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